Contact

  • Français
  • Español
  • Surveys - Analysis
    Français    

    What are the reasons for French resistance to development aid spending?

    Published on 23/07/2018.

    Official development assistance (ODA) suffers from a poor reputation, which is reflected in the most common concerns expressed by French people over aid: corruption, wastefulness, ineffectiveness, etc.

    International aid is “wasted”

    The majority of French people have a bad opinion on French development aid. 56% think it is wasted, which is a common conception about development aid.

    Only 10% seem confident that ODA is used effectively.

    Aid just goes to line the pockets of corrupt leaders

    Corruption is a major reason for French concern about development aid.

    65% say aid does not achieve its purpose because it ends up instead in the pockets of corrupt leaders of developing countries.

    This majority opinion shows a commonly-held view of a poor reputation of politicians in developing countries. In focus groups held in parallel to the survey in France, we frequently see assumptions of poverty being the result of corrupt political regimes in developing countries.

    Aid-dependency

    41% of French people think that development aid provided to the poorest countries will make them dependent on handouts from richer countries.

    This result is an echo of results seen when French people are asked about development policy priorities, since a majority also believe in the importance of improving poor countries’ economic development, or ideally, a development programme which would help poor countries “once and for all”.

    Aid is not therefore criticised here as a mechanism of international solidarity, but rather for its supposed secondary effects.

    Global poverty: an endless problem?

    For half of French people, population growth in poor countries renders aid pointless. This is not therefore disapproval of aid, rather of the inability to resolve global poverty through aid given its primary causes (in this case, too-rapid population growth).

    For 50% of French people, therefore, aid cannot help given the rapidity and scale of growth in populations and the number of people that need or will need help. This kind of answer demonstrates a sort of resignation by French people to a problem which rich countries simply cannot solve.

    This data comes from our survey conducted by the YouGov Institute and piloted by the research team at University College London and the University of Birmingham as part of the project Aid Attitudes Tracker which measures the evolution of opinions and behaviors on issues of international solidarity in four countries.

    To learn more
  • Retrouvez la méthodologie du projet Aid Attitudes Tracker
  • ALSO READ

    Development financing - 04 June 2026

    Reforming the international financial architecture: where do we stand?

    Focus 2030 Reforming the international financial architecture: where do we stand? Focus 2030 independently tracks the commitments made at the Summit for a New Global Financing Pact in 2023. Updated on an ongoing basis, this tracker documents progress towards reforming the international architecture for development and climate finance. Access the tracker Download the report · […]
    G7 - 02 June 2026

    Financing international development: the decisive role of G7 countries in a context of disengagement

    Special feature: French G7 Presidency Explore our special report to understand the issues related to the French G7 Presidency in 2026, gain insight into the key policy priorities, and follow the latest updates. Access the special report ➔ In 2026, France’s G7 Presidency aims to bring development financing back to the forefront of the international […]
    Analysis - 18 May 2026

    In Nairobi, the Africa Forward Summit signals a shift toward a new Franco-African development finance doctrine

    Co-hosted by France and Kenya on 11-12 May 2026, the Africa Forward Summit marked an attempt to redefine relations between France and the African continent around a new narrative: one centered on equal partnership, private investment, and strategic autonomy. Behind the €23 billion in announced commitments, the summit also reflects a deeper transformation: the explicit […]
    Development financing - 09 April 2026

    Historic drop in Official Development Assistance in 2025

    ODA from DAC members fell to 174.3 billion USD in 2025, a 23.1% drop from 2024 (-50 billion USD in real terms), representing 0.26% of their income. It is the highest fall on record. 
    Development financing - 30 March 2026

    The African Development Fund: allocating concessional resources to the 37 most vulnerable countries on the continent

    As the 17th replenishment of the African Development Fund (ADF-17), held on 15-16 December 2025 in London, draws to a close, expressed financing needs from beneficiary countries have reached USD 25 billion. In a context of mounting budgetary pressures among traditional donors, a central question emerges : will international mobilization be sufficient to meet the challenges ?
    G7 - 09 February 2026

    G7 France 2026 : focus on development matters, key challenges, debates and emerging priorities

    In 2026, France holds the presidency of the G7, with the Heads of State Summit scheduled to take place in Evian from June 15 to 17. Keep up with the latest news.